Fortunately, you can bypass much of this seasonal madness by making your own meaningful gifts instead of (or at least in addition to) heading to big-box stores. And if you’re gardening indoors or have produce that you preserved earlier this year, there are a number of plant-based presents you could make.

For your inspiration (and sanity), explore the following seven homegrown gift ideas — they’re ordered by time and effort required, starting with the simplest projects.

1. Homegrown Bouquet

Growing flowers or floral herbs, such as lavender? A fresh bouquet is just about the easiest homegrown gift you can make.

Simply harvest and bind the plants with twine or ribbon. Piece of cake!

2. Seasoning Blends

Spices from the grocery store often come at a premium price. Which makes them pretty great gifts — especially when they cost you almost nothing to grow.

Consider creating custom blends for the cooks in your in your life. You could combine dried basil, oregano, parsley, rosemary, and thyme to make a traditional Italian mix, for example. (Wellness Mama has 14 other recipes for you to try.)

3. Herbal Bath Mix

Give the gift of a good, relaxing soak by preparing an herbal bath mix. It requires only one step: putting about half a cup of dried herbs in a muslin bag. To use it, your gift recipient can simply toss the bag into the bathtub as the water is running.

Which herbs should you use? Lemon balm and lavender are both famous for their ability to lift spirits, and rosemary reportedly relieves pain. For even more ideas, check out this list from Prevention Magazine.

4. Potpourri

Potpourri is an experiential gift your loved ones will enjoy for months. To make it, combine dried aromatic herbs, such as lavender, sage, and rosemary, with decorative ingredients (e.g., pine cones), and then spritz the mixture with essential oils.

You can present your potpourri in a nice wooden, ceramic, or class bowl, or put it in sachets — small cloth bags that are ideal for hanging in bathrooms and closets.

5. Starter Plants

If you know any green thumbed-individuals — and if you’re currently growing an indoor herb garden — consider propagating new seedlings as presents. There are a couple of propagation methods.

The first is to take a cutting. Rather than sprouting seeds, many herbs — including rosemary, sage, thyme, lavender, and others — are actually easier to start this way:

Snip up to three inches of tender, new growth from the mother plant.

Remove the leaves from the bottom of the stem, and dip it in rooting hormone (available from most gardening shops).

Plant the cutting in soil, pressing it down until the bottommost leaves nearly touch the surface, and pinch the soil around the stem.

Place the cutting in a warm environment (out of direct sunlight) that has good air circulation.

When you follow these steps, most plants will root within a few weeks. You’ll know that the cutting has taken when it resists a gentle tug.

You can also propagate crops that produce runners (e.g., strawberries, mint, passionflower) easily with a method called “layering.” These plants naturally sprout roots wherever runner nodes come in direct contact with soil. So all you must do is anchor the runners to a pot of soil.

Achieve this by bending a paper clip into a horseshoe shape, placing the runner inside the “u,” and pushing it into the soil. And after a week or two, the runner should root. Once it has, simply cut the stem connecting the rooted plantlet to the mother plant.

To prepare an infused vinegar, follow the same steps above, but substitute red or white vinegar for the oil, and heat it before adding the herbs and again after it’s finished infusing. Organic Authority offers more instructions (plus recipe ideas) here.

7. Processed Produce

Though most of the suggestions on this list use raw produce, processing or cooking your harvests is a fun way to level up your gift. For example, pesto and canned goods — such as tomato sauce and salsa — are value-added presents that store well.

Browse this free cookbook (created with help from dozens of Tower Gardeners) for exceptional recipes that use homegrown produce.

Bonus: Essential Oils

Because they contain a highly concentrated dose of the uplifting aromas and medicinal compounds that herbs and other plants offer, essential oils are commonly used in aromatherapy, as well as to make perfumes, cleaning products, and incense.

Distilling essential oils is a complex process that requires specialized tools and equipment. And for that reason, I’m not going to dig into the specifics of the project in this post.